
Professor Andrew MacLeod has a deep understanding of today’s changing geopolitical landscape. His diverse portfolio career covers for profit, not for profit, military, and academia. He is emeritus chair and former CEO and Chair of Griffin Law (UK), is a Non-Executive Director on multiple companies in the UK, Middle East and Australia, is a visiting Professor at Kings College London, a former Council Member at Keele University and a Vice Chancellor’s Distinguished Fellow at Deakin University and is co-founder of anti-child-abuse charity Hear Their Cries.
His background includes critical roles in start-up to growth in sustainable investing fintech (Cornerstone Capital, Sendry), award-winning professional services practices (Griffin Law) and critical environment advice (Burnham Global, Consilium Strategies and Risk Advisory Group). He has built long lasting private sector/not for profit partnerships (Rio Tinto and Griffin Law), built massive humanitarian response operations (United Nations and Red Cross) and is a global leader in innovative safeguarding (Kings College and Hear their Cries).
His private sector focus is the interface between corporation and the community and has a major focus on innovation to remove toxic chemicals from gold, copper (and similar metals) from the mining and e-waste recycling process through Deep Eutectic Salts (DES).
In philanthropy, MacLeod is the leading driver in using Genetic Genealogy to find fathers of children left behind by abusing sex tourists, aid workers and soldiers.
A leading communicator, MacLeod is effective on major TV networks globally, including BBC World and CNN. He is a master public speaker and Executive Coach.
His previous humanitarian work included deployments to Rwanda and former Yugoslavia for the International Committee of the Red Cross, and multiple deployments for the UN including Chief of Operations of the UN’s Emergency Coordination Centre in Pakistan. Early on, MacLeod served as an officer in the Australian Army including periods attached to the British Army.
MacLeod has received the Humanitarian Overseas Service Medal twice, the Australian Defence Medal, University of Tasmania Foundation distinguished Graduate Award, the 2013 Young Britons Foundation Global Leadership for Freedom Award and the 2008 Australian Davos Connection Leadership Award, amongst others.
Andrew was also a world-class swimmer having won a silver medal for the 200 meters Butterfly at the 2002 World Masters Games. He regularly volunteered to help national swimming teams in the developing countries.
With his varied experience Andrew is an asset who brings the ability to identify, strategize and implement sustainable solutions to many of the global political, economic environment and social issues today.